Deleted:Omar Abdulayev

From WikiAlpha
Revision as of 02:52, 10 July 2012 by SaveArticleBot (Talk | contribs) (Via SaveArticle)

(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search
The below content is licensed according to Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License contrary to the public domain logo at the foot of the page. It originally appeared on http://en.wikipedia.org. The original article might still be accessible here. You may be able to find a list of the article's previous contributors on the talk page.

Omar Hamzayevich Abdulayev
Born October 11, 1978 (1978-10-11) (age 45)
Dushanbe, Tajikistan

Omar Hamzayevich Abdulayev is a citizen of Tajikistan, held in extrajudicial detention in the United States's Guantanamo Bay detention camps, in Cuba.[1]

The Department of Defense reports that Abdulayev was born on October 11, 1978, in Dushanbe, Tajikistan.

As of August 10, 2011, Omar Hamzayavich Abdulayev has been held at Guantanamo for nine years six months.[2]

Habeas corpus petition

Abdulayev had a writ of habeas corpus filed on his behalf. It was amalgamated with several dozen other captives, in 05-CV-2386 before US District Court Judge Reggie B. Walton.

On 29 December 2008 Allison M. Lefrak filed protected information, under seal, on his behalf.[3]

Still in Guantanamo

Carol Rosenberg, writing in the Miami Herald, reports that Umar Abdulayev fears being repatriated to Tajikistan, and wants to remain in Guantanamo.[dead link] Quoting Abdulayev's lawyer Matthew J. O'Hara, Rosenberg reported Abdulayev was a refugee who had fled Tajikistan to Afghanistan when he was thirteen years old. Rosenberg wrote that Abdulayev says camp authorities allowed Tajikistani security officials to meet with him, and that they told him he could be released—if he agreed to pretend to be a Muslim militant, and spy on Muslim militants in Tajikistan. She reported that the Tajikistani security officials threatened retribution when he declined to serve as a spy.[4]

Department of Justice officials told U.S. District Court Judge Reggie Walton on June 3, 2009 that they would no longer try to defend classifying him an enemy combatant.[4]

Abdulayev's lawyer, Matthew J. O'Hara, during a November 2009 interview on National Public Radio, that among the reasons Abdulayev fears repatriation to Tajikistan is that the family he left behind in a Pakistani refugee camp has disappeared.[5] All efforts to contact them, following his 2001 capture, had failed. O'Hara said Abdulayev's father died in 1994, attempting to return to Tajikistan. O'Hara said two of the other Tajikistanis received long prison terms following their repatriation.

References

External links